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    Music Matters

    Special Houston concert moment: Country music legend credits Texas — and the Rodeo — for his career

    Eric Sandler
    Mar 8, 2015 | 12:26 am

    A Houstonian doesn’t have to be a country music fan to recognize Alan Jackson’s music. From truck commercials to bars to sports stadiums, Jackson’s music is part of the city’s musical landscape.

    That’s why he’s now performed at the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo 22-times in his 25 year career. That’s why he’s one of only eight members of the Rodeo’s Star Trail of Fame, alongside legends like Elvis Presley, Charley Pride and George Strait.

    Even if Jackson’s hair is a little grayer now than in his first Rodeo performance in 1992, he still looks the part of a country crooner in his blue jeans, boots and white, broad-brimmed cowboy hat.

    A crowd of 74,695 — easily the biggest of the Rodeo's first week — filled the seats and aisles of NRG Stadium, two-stepping through their favorites and clapping at the end of every familiar tune. Unlike some of the younger acts on the bill, Jackson’s audience spans multiple generations. Parents and grandparents with kids in tow settled in for an evening of traditional country music.

    “I’ve had more hits than I can remember and sold more records that I can imagine. Texas has been really great to me."

    He strode onto the stage and immediately launched into the song that’s provided the motto for his career, “Gone Country.”

    After briefly introducing his band the Stray Horns, Jackson launched into what was surely an unnecessary introduction: Telling the crowd he sings songs on topics like “Life, love, heart, drinking and dancing and having a good time.

    “I hope I play something you like tonight,” he concluded before moving into the heart of his set with "Living on Love."

    He needn’t have worried.

    “I’ve had more hits than I can remember and sold more records that I can imagine. Texas has been really great to me,” Jackson told the crowd. “I have to say thanks to the Houston Rodeo. They’ve been so great to me over the years.”

    The set showed Jackson’s mastery of his audience. Cellphones swayed throughout the stadium during 9/11 tribute “Where Were You?” Then the crowd sang along to familiar hits like “Don’t Rock the Jukebox” and “Honky Tonk Dream.”

    In the absence of Zac Brown (he’ll be here Thursday), Jackson sang a duet with his guitarist, who donned Brown’s signature stocking cap, for a cover of “Walking Away.”

    Jackson even deviated from the pre-show set list by dropping in a new song from his upcoming album, the rockabilly-tinged "You Never Know.” If it sounds like it could have come from his first, well, that’s just country music, y’all.

    After indulging in a little nostalgia, with the sentimental ballad “Remember When,” Jackson kicked it into high gear for the remainder of the set. As he noted, it was Saturday night.

    Jackson exited onto the back of a pickup truck after the final chords of closer “Cornbread” leaving the crowd wanting more. Not to worry, he’ll probably be back next year.

    Alan Jackson's Rodeo Set List:

    Gone Country

    Livin' on Love

    Little Bitty

    Drive

    Where Were You (When the World Stopped Turning)?

    Don’t Rock the Jukebox

    Chasin That Neon Rainbow

    As She's Walking Away

    You Never Know

    Remember When

    Good Time

    It's 5 O’Clock Somewhere

    Chattahooche

    Cornbread and Chicken

    The Saturday night Alan Jackson show was the largest of the Rodeo's first week — and it brought out the old and the young. Here Jacob Arnst (23 months) is given a better view by his dad Kurt.

    Alan Jackson toddler
    Photo by Michelle Watson CatchLightGroup.com
    The Saturday night Alan Jackson show was the largest of the Rodeo's first week — and it brought out the old and the young. Here Jacob Arnst (23 months) is given a better view by his dad Kurt.
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    Movie Review Time

    Star-studded cast and Oscar-winning director power dramatic A House of Dynamite

    Alex Bentley
    Oct 13, 2025 | 9:15 am
    Rebecca Ferguson in A House of Dynamite
    Photo courtesy of Netflix
    Rebecca Ferguson in A House of Dynamite.

    Director Kathryn Bigelow has had two distinct phases to her feature film career. From the early ‘80s to the early 2000s, she made movies for the masses like Near Dark, Point Break, and K-19: The Widowmaker. But that all changed with the 2008 release of the Iraq War film The Hurt Locker, for which she won the Oscar for Best Director and Best Picture. Every movie of hers since then has leaned hard into real-world drama, including the new A House of Dynamite.

    Instead of trying to understand past events, this film imagines a scenario that is still frighteningly real: Nuclear war. As the story begins, it’s discovered that a missile has been fired in the direction of the United States from close to the east coast of Asia where China, Russia, and North Korea connect. The unattributed weapon is at first thought to be a test, but when it continues on a path toward the U.S., people at all different levels of the U.S. government try to figure out how to stop it and what to do if they can’t.

    The same story is essentially told three different times, changing the perspective to different officials in multiple locations around the country. They include people at an Army missile defense base in Alaska, led by Major Daniel Gonzalez (Anthony Ramos); the White House Situation Room, led by Captain Olivia Walker (Rebecca Ferguson); a top brass video call featuring General Anthony Brady (Tracy Letts) and Secretary of Defense Reid Baker (Jared Harris); and, naturally, the President of the United States (Idris Elba).

    Directed by Bigelow and written by Noah Oppenheim, the film is an extremely tense experience as it juggles the personal and professional lives of many different people. The sense of duty that each one of them feels in serving their country slowly turns inward as they understand that a major American city could be wiped off the map, an event that would almost certainly trigger World War III.

    Bigelow and Oppenheim do a fantastic job of serving the bigger stars in the cast, as well as the supporting actors who may not be as well known. A normal film would be able to take more time to establish the various characters, but the intensity of the plot lends extra meaning to every moment, allowing the audience to connect with everyone more quickly. It’s not at all difficult to put yourself in the shoes of those in the film who desperately try to get in touch with loved ones as the threat becomes larger.

    Telling the story three times from different perspectives not only allows the audience to understand who all is involved in such a world-changing event, but it also shines a light on the strengths and weaknesses of each department. How accurate the film is to what would happen in real life is debatable, but the film gives off an air of legitimacy in how it depicts the actions of the various players.

    Given the structure of the film, there’s no one star, but each of the main actors does a fine job in bringing their characters to life. Ferguson, Letts, Harris, and Elba are the most compelling in their roles, but other people like Jason Clarke, Greta Lee, Malachi Beasley, and Jonah Hauer-King do a lot with their limited time on screen. The cast is so packed that someone like Kaitlyn Dever is given only one small, albeit impactful, scene.

    The ending of the film is likely to be divisive, but it only serves to underscore the idea that no one can truly know how to handle an existential threat like nuclear war. The military and the government can simulate and prepare all they want, but it’s only when things go to hell that anyone can tell if they’re able to meet the moment.

    ---

    A House of Dynamite is now playing in select theaters. It debuts on Netflix on October 24.

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